[0001] The present disclosure relates to cooling systems, and more particularly, to high
efficiency cooling systems.
BACKGROUND
[0002] This section provides background information related to the present disclosure which
is not necessarily prior art.
[0003] Cooling systems have applicability in a number of different applications where fluid
is to be cooled. They are used in cooling gas, such as air, and liquids, such as water.
Two common examples are building HVAC (heating, ventilation, air conditioning) systems
that are used for "comfort cooling," that is, to cool spaces where people are present
such as offices, and data center climate control systems.
[0004] A data center is a room containing a collection of electronic equipment, such as
computer servers. Data centers and the equipment contained therein typically have
optimal environmental operating conditions, temperature and humidity in particular.
Cooling systems used for data centers typically include climate control systems, usually
implemented as part the control for the cooling system, to maintain the proper temperature
and humidity in the data center.
[0005] Fig. 1 shows an example of a typical data center 100 having a climate control system
102 (also known as a cooling system). Data center 100 illustratively utilizes the
"hot" and "cold" aisle approach where equipment racks 104 are arranged to create hot
aisles 106 and cold aisles 108. Data center 100 is also illustratively a raised floor
data center having a raised floor 110 above a sub-floor 112. The space between raised
floor 110 and sub-floor 112 provides a supply air plenum 114 for conditioned supply
air (sometimes referred to as "cold" air) flowing from computer room air conditioners
("CRACs") 116 of climate control system 102 up through raised floor 110 into data
center 100. The conditioned supply air then flows into the fronts of equipment racks
104, through the equipment (not shown) mounted in the equipment racks where it cools
the equipment, and the hot air is then exhausted out through the backs of equipment
racks 104, or the tops of racks 104. In variations, the conditioned supply air flows
into bottoms of the racks and is exhausted out of the backs of the racks 104 or the
tops of the racks 104.
[0006] It should be understood that data center 100 may not have a raised floor 110 nor
plenum 114. In this case, the CRAC's 116 would draw in through an air inlet (not shown)
heated air from the data center, cool it, and exhaust it from an air outlet 117 shown
in phantom in Fig. 1 back into the data center. The CRACS 116 may, for example, be
arranged in the rows of the electronic equipment, may be disposed with their cool
air supply facing respective cold aisles, or be disposed along walls of the data center.
[0007] In the example data center 100 shown in Fig. 1, data center 100 has a dropped ceiling
118 where the space between dropped ceiling 118 and ceiling 120 provides a hot air
plenum 122 into which the hot air exhausted from equipment racks 104 is drawn and
through which the hot air flows back to CRACs 116. A return air plenum (not shown)
for each CRAC 116 couples that CRAC 116 to plenum 122.
[0008] CRACs 116 may be chilled water CRACs or direct expansion (DX) CRACs. CRACs 116 are
coupled to a heat rejection device 124 that provides cooled liquid to CRACs 116. Heat
rejection device 124 is a device that transfers heat from the return fluid from CRACs
116 to a cooler medium, such as outside ambient air. Heat rejection device 124 may
include air or liquid cooled heat exchangers. Heat rejection device 124 may also be
a refrigeration condenser system, in which case a refrigerant is provided to CRACs
116 and CRACs 116 may be phase change refrigerant air conditioning systems having
refrigerant compressors, such as a DX system. Each CRAC 116 may include a control
module 125 that controls the CRAC 116.
[0009] In an aspect, CRAC 116 includes a variable capacity compressor and may for example
include a variable capacity compressor for each DX cooling circuit of CRAC 116. It
should be understood that CRAC 116 may, as is often the case, have multiple DX cooling
circuits. In an aspect, CRAC 116 includes a capacity modulated type of compressor
or a 4-step semi-hermetic compressor, such as those available from Emerson Climate
Technologies, Liebert Corporation or the Carlyle division of United Technologies.
CRAC 116 may also include one or more air moving units 119, such as fans or blowers.
The air moving units 119 may be provided in CRACs 116 or may additionally or alternatively
be provided in supply air plenum 114 as shown in phantom at 121. Air moving units
119, 121 may illustratively have variable speed drives.
[0010] A typical CRAC 200 having a typical DX cooling circuit is shown in Fig. 2. CRAC 200
has a cabinet 202 in which an evaporator 204 is disposed. Evaporator 204 may be a
V-coil assembly. An air moving unit 206, such as a fan or squirrel cage blower, is
also disposed in cabinet 202 and situated to draw air through evaporator 204 from
an inlet (not shown) of cabinet 202, where it is cooled by evaporator 204, and direct
the cooled air out of plenum 208. Evaporator 204, a compressor 210, a condenser 212
and an expansion valve 214 are coupled together in known fashion in a DX refrigeration
circuit. A phase change refrigerant is circulated by compressor 210 through condenser
212, expansion valve 214, evaporator 204 and back to compressor 210. Condenser 212
may be any of a variety of types of condensers conventionally used in cooling systems,
such as an air cooled condenser, a water cooled condenser, or glycol cooled condenser.
It should be understood that condenser 210 is often not part of the CRAC but is located
elsewhere, such as outside the building in which the CRAC is located. Compressor 210
may be any of a variety of types of compressors conventionally used in DX refrigeration
systems, such as a scroll compressor. When evaporator 204 is a V-coil or A-coil assembly,
it typically has a cooling slab (or slabs) on each leg of the V or A, as applicable.
Each cooling slab may, for example, be in a separate cooling circuit with each cooling
circuit having a separate compressor. Alternatively, the fluid circuits in each slab
such as where there are two slabs and two compressor circuits, can be intermingled
among the two compressor circuits.
[0011] Evaporator 204 is typically a fin-and-tube assembly and is used to both cool and
dehumidify the air passing through them. Typically, CRAC's such as CRAC 200 are designed
so that the sensible heat ratio ("SHR") is typically between .85 and .95.
[0012] A system known as the GLYCOOL free-cooling system is available from Liebert Corporation
of Columbus, Ohio. In this system, a second cooling coil assembly, known as a "free
cooling coil," is added to a CRAC having a normal glycol system. This second coil
assembly is added in the air stream ahead of the first cooling coil assembly. During
colder months, the glycol solution returning from the outdoor drycooler is routed
to the second cooling coil assembly and becomes the primary source of cooling to the
data center. At ambient temperatures below 35 deg. F, the cooling capacity of the
second cooling coil assembly is sufficient to handle the total cooling needs of the
data center and substantially reduces energy costs since the compressor of the CRAC
need not be run. The second or free cooling coil assembly does not provide 100% sensible
cooling and has an airside pressure drop similar to the evaporator (which is the first
cooling coil assembly).
[0013] Efficiency of cooling systems has taken on increased importance. According to the
U.S. Department of Energy, cooling and power conversion systems for data centers consume
at least half the power used in a typical data center. In other words, less than half
the power is consumed by the servers in the data center. This has led to increased
focus on energy efficiency in data center cooling systems.
SUMMARY
[0014] In accordance with an aspect of the present disclosure, a cooling system includes
a cabinet having an air inlet and an air outlet and a cooling circuit that includes
an evaporator disposed in the cabinet, a condenser, a compressor, an expansion device
and a liquid pump. The cooling system has a direct expansion mode wherein the compressor
is on and compresses a refrigerant in a vapor phase to raise its pressure and thus
its condensing temperature and refrigerant is circulated around the cooling circuit
by the compressor. The cooling system also has a pumped refrigerant economizer mode
wherein the compressor is off and the liquid pump is on and pumps the refrigerant
in a liquid phase and refrigerant is circulated around the cooling circuit by the
liquid pump and without compressing the refrigerant in its vapor phase. In an aspect,
the cooling system has a controller coupled to the liquid pump and the compressor
that turns the compressor off and the liquid pump on to operate the cooling circuit
in the economizer mode and turns the compressor on to operate the cooling circuit
in the direct expansion mode. In an aspect, the controller includes a load estimator
that estimates real-time indoor load on the cooling system and uses the estimated
real-time indoor load to determine whether to operate the cooling system in the pumped
refrigerant economizer mode or in the direct expansion mode.
[0015] In an aspect, the load estimator calculates the real-time indoor load based on the
indoor return air temperature, the supply air temperature and the volume of air flow
across the evaporator. In an aspect, if supply air temperature is not available, the
load estimator uses compressor loading information instead.
[0016] In an aspect, the cooling circuit includes a receiver/surge tank coupled between
the condenser and the liquid pump.
[0017] In an aspect, the cooling system includes a plurality of cooling circuits with each
cooling circuit included in one of a plurality of cooling stages including an upstream
cooling stage and a downstream cooling stage wherein the evaporator of the cooling
circuit of the upstream cooling stage (upstream evaporator) and the evaporator of
the cooling circuit of the downstream cooling stage (downstream evaporator) are arranged
in the cabinet so that air to be cooled passes over them in serial fashion, first
over the upstream evaporator and then over the downstream evaporators. The cooling
circuit of each cooling stage has the direct expansion mode wherein the compressor
of that cooling circuit is on and the refrigerant is circulated around the cooling
circuit by the compressor of that cooling circuit and a pumped refrigerant economizer
mode wherein the compressor of that cooling circuit is off and the liquid pump of
that cooling circuit is on and the refrigerant is circulated around the cooling circuit
by the liquid pump of that cooling circuit. In an aspect, when one of the upstream
and downstream cooling stages can be in the economizer mode and the other must be
in the direct expansion mode, the controller operates the cooling circuit of the upstream
cooling stage in the economizer mode turning the liquid pump of that cooling circuit
on and the compressor of that cooling circuit off and operates the downstream cooling
stage in the direct expansion mode turning the compressor of the downstream cooling
circuit on.
[0018] EP2389056 relates to a computer room air conditioner ("CRAC") with a cabinet having an air
inlet through which return air from an area is drawn and an air outlet through which
air cooled by the CRAC is exhausted. An air moving unit is disposed in the cabinet
as are a plurality of cooling coils, which are in separate cooling circuits. The cooling
coils are arranged so that the air passes through the cooling coils in serial fashion,
that is, first through an upstream cooling coil and then through a downstream cooling
cool. The upstream cooling coil acts as a pre-cooler to the subsequent downstream
cooling coil. The CRAC includes a controller that controls the cooling provided by
the cooling circuits. The controller controls the cooling provided by the upstream
cooling circuit so that when it is being used to provide cooling, it provides only
sensible cooling.
[0019] The present invention is set out in the independent claims, with some optional features
set out in the claims dependent thereto.
DRAWINGS
[0020] The drawings described herein are for illustrative purposes only of selected embodiments
and not all possible implementations, and are not intended to limit the scope of the
present disclosure.
Fig. 1 is a schematic illustrating a prior art data center;
Fig. 2 is a simplified perspective view of a prior art CRAC having a DX cooling circuit;
Fig. 3 is a schematic showing a CRAC having staged cooling provided by two cooling
circuits;
Fig. 4 is a simplified perspective view of a CRAC having the cooling circuits of the
CRAC of Fig. 3;
Fig. 5 is a cooling system having a DX cooling circuit with a pumped refrigerant economizer;
Figs. 6, 7A and 7B are variations of the cooling system of Fig. 5;
Fig. 8 is a schematic showing a cooling system having staged cooling provided by two
cooling circuits of Fig. 5;
Fig. 9 is a schematic showing the cooling system of Fig. 5 and showing in more detail
the control system therewith;
Fig. 10 shows control loops for the control system of Fig. 9; and
Fig. 11 is a flow chart showing an illustrative control of a cooling system utilizing
a load estimator in accordance with an aspect of the present disclosure.
[0021] Corresponding reference numerals indicate corresponding parts throughout the several
views of the drawings.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0022] Example embodiments will now be described more fully with reference to the accompanying
drawings.
[0023] In accordance with an aspect of the present disclosure, a high efficiency cooling
system includes staged cooling provided by two or more cooling circuits arranged so
that air to be cooled flows through them serially. In an aspect, each cooling circuit
includes a tandem digital scroll compressor made up of a fixed capacity scroll compressor
and digital scroll compressor. It should be understood that instead of tandem digital
compressors, a plurality of compressors can be plumbed in parallel and these compressors
may have differing capacities. In an aspect, each cooling circuit includes a DX cooling
circuit and a pumped refrigerant economization circuit that bypasses the compressor
when the outdoor temperature is sufficiently low to provide the requisite cooling
to the refrigerant being circulating in the cooling circuit. In an aspect, the high
efficiency cooling system also includes one or more fans, blowers or similar air moving
units that move air to be cooled through the evaporators of each cooling circuit.
The motors of the air moving unit may illustratively be variable speed motors, and
may illustratively be electronically controlled motors. The same may be the case for
the fan motors for the condenser. In an aspect, the cooling circuits of the high efficiency
cooling system include an electronic expansion valve.
[0024] It should be understood that a cooling system can have less than all these elements,
and can have various combinations of them. For example, the cooling system may not
have staged cooling but have a cooling circuit that includes a DX cooling circuit
and the pumped refrigerant economization circuit. In this aspect, the tandem digital
scroll may or may not be utilized.
[0025] Fig. 3 is a simplified schematic of a cooling system 300 having a plurality of cooling
stages including an upstream cooling stage 322 with an upstream cooling circuit 301
and a downstream cooling stage 324 with a downstream cooling circuit 302 in accordance
with an aspect of the present disclosure. In the embodiment of Fig. 3, cooling circuits
301, 302 are both DX refrigeration circuits. Upstream cooling circuit 301 includes
an evaporator referred to as upstream evaporator 304, expansion valve 306, condenser
308 and compressor 310 arranged in a conventional DX refrigeration circuit. Downstream
cooling circuit 302 includes an evaporator referred to as downstream evaporator 312,
expansion valve 314, condenser 316 and compressor 318 arranged in a conventional DX
refrigeration circuit. In this regard, evaporator 304, expansion valve 306 and compressor
310 of upstream cooling circuit 301 and evaporator 312, expansion valve 314 and compressor
318 of downstream cooling circuit 302 may all be included in a CRAC 326 located in
a data center along with controller 320. Condensers 308, 316 are shown in dashed boxes
as they are typically not included in CRAC 326 but located elsewhere, such as outside
the building in which CRAC 326 is located. Expansion valves 306, 314 may preferably
be electronic expansion valves, but may also be thermostatic expansion valves such
as those disclosed in
U.S. 4,606,198. In each DX refrigeration circuit 301, 302, a refrigerant is circulated by the compressor
and it flows from the compressor, through the condenser, expansion valve, evaporator
and back to the compressor. The evaporators 304, 312 of upstream and downstream cooling
circuits 301, 302 are arranged in stages so that air drawn in through an inlet of
the CRAC flows in serial fashion through evaporators 304, 312, that is, the air flows
first through the upstream evaporator 304 in upstream cooling circuit 301 and then
through downstream evaporator 312 in the downstream cooling circuit 302. By having
a plurality of cooling stages arranged for serial air flow therethrough, the temperature
differential across the evaporators of each DX refrigeration circuit is reduced. This
in turn allows the evaporators in each DX refrigeration circuit to operate at different
pressure levels and allows the pressure differences between the respective evaporators
and condensers to be reduced. Since compressor power is a function of the pressure
difference between the evaporator and condenser, a lower pressure difference is more
energy efficient. It should be understood that each compressor 310, 318 may include
tandem compressors with one compressor a fixed capacity compressor and the other compressor
a variable capacity compressor, such as a digital scroll compressor. Each compressor
310, 318 may be a tandem digital scroll compressor that includes a fixed capacity
scroll compressor and a digital scroll compressor, as discussed in more detail below.
[0026] It should be understood that condensers 308, 316 can be any of the heat rejection
devices described above with regard to heat rejection device 124 of Fig. 1.
[0027] The cooling circuit of each stage provides a portion of the overall cooling provided
by CRAC 326 of cooling system 300. The portions can be equal, with each stage providing
equal cooling, or they can be different. More specifically, each cooling stage has
a maximum temperature difference that is a portion of the maximum temperature difference
across CRAC 326. For example, if CRAC 326 has a maximum temperature difference of
20 deg. F, the cooling circuit of each stage has a maximum temperature difference
that is some percentage of 20 deg. F. This may be an equal percentage, in which case
cooling circuit 301, 302 each have a maximum 10 deg. F temperature difference where
the maximum temperature difference across CRAC 326 is 20 deg. F, or the percentages
may be different.
[0028] Cooling system includes controller 320 that controls cooling circuits 301, 302.
[0029] In an aspect, evaporators 304, 312 may have a plurality of cooling slabs, such as
in a V-coil assembly, and instead of having each cooling slab of downstream evaporator
312 be fed by separate compressors, both cooling slabs of downstream evaporator 312
would be fed by a compressor and both cooling slabs of upstream evaporator 304 would
be fed by another compressor. These two compressors would preferably have equal capacity
and the staged cooling allows the two compressors to be smaller (lesser capacity)
than the two compressors used to feed the two cooling slabs of an evaporator in a
typical prior art CRAC having DX refrigeration circuits for the two cooling slabs
that provide comparable cooling capacity.
[0030] In an alternate embodiment, compressor 318 in downstream cooling circuit 302 is larger
(that is, has a higher capacity) than compressor 310 in upstream cooling circuit 301
in order to decrease the evaporating temperature of the refrigerant provided to downstream
evaporator 312. This in turn decreases the sensible heat ratio and increases the dehumidification
capabilities of downstream cooling circuit 302. In this embodiment, downstream evaporator
312 may have the same cooling surface area as that of upstream evaporator 304 in upstream
cooling circuit 301, or may have a cooling surface area that is different (larger
or smaller) than the surface cooling area of upstream evaporator 304.
[0031] In an aspect, upstream evaporator 304 in upstream cooling circuit 301 is a microchannel
cooling coil assembly. Upstream evaporator 304 may illustratively be a microchannel
heat exchanger of the type described in USSN
12/388,102 filed February 18, 2009 for "Laminated Manifold for Microchannel Heat Exchanger" the entire disclosure of
which is incorporated herein by reference. Upstream evaporator 304 may illustratively
be a MCHX microchannel heat exchanger available from Liebert Corporation of Columbus,
Ohio. When upstream evaporator 304 is a micro-channel heat exchanger, upstream cooling
circuit 301 is illustratively configured to provide sensible only cooling, such as
providing a temperature delta across upstream evaporator 304 that does not drop the
temperature of the air exiting upstream evaporator 304 below its dewpoint, or below
a temperature a certain number of degrees above the dewpoint, such as about 4 deg.
F. While one advantage of using a microchannel cooling coil assembly for upstream
evaporator 304 of upstream cooling circuit 301 is that microchannel cooling coil assemblies
have air side pressure drops across them that are significantly less than fin-and-tube
cooling coil assemblies having comparable cooling capacity, it should be understood
that upstream evaporator 304 can be other than a microchannel cooling coil, and may
for example be a fin-and-tube cooling coil assembly.
[0032] In an aspect, downstream evaporator 312 of downstream cooling circuit 302 is a fin-and-tube
cooling coil assembly. In an aspect, downstream evaporator 312 is a microchannel cooling
coil assembly.
[0033] Fig. 4 shows an illustrative embodiment of CRAC 326. CRAC 326 includes a cabinet
400 having a return air inlet 402 and an air outlet 404, such as a plenum. An air
filter 406 is disposed at return air inlet 402 so that air flowing into CRAC 326 through
return air inlet 402 flows through air filter 406 before flowing through the rest
of CRAC 326. Arrows 414 show the direction of air flow through CRAC 326.
[0034] In the embodiment shown in Fig. 4, downstream evaporator 312 of downstream cooling
circuit 302 is an A-coil assembly disposed in cabinet 400 between return air inlet
402 and air outlet 404. Downstream evaporator 312 thus has a cooling slab 410 for
each leg of the A. Upstream evaporator 304 is also an A-coil assembly having a cooling
slab 412 for each leg of the A. An air moving unit 408, such as a fan or squirrel
cage blower, is disposed in cabinet 400 between a downstream side of downstream evaporator
312 and air outlet 404. One of the cooling slabs 412 of upstream evaporator 304 is
disposed on the air inlet side of one of the cooling slabs 410 of downstream evaporator
312 and the other of the cooling slabs 412 of upstream evaporator 304 is disposed
on the air inlet side of the other of the cooling slabs 410 of downstream evaporator
312. The cooling slabs 410 of downstream evaporator 312 and the cooling slabs 412
of upstream evaporator 304 are thus arranged in pairs, with respective ones of the
cooling slabs 412 of upstream evaporator paired with respective ones of the cooling
slabs 410 of downstream evaporator 312. In should be understood that air moving unit
408 may alternatively be disposed upstream of upstream evaporator 304.
[0035] While the downstream evaporator discussed above was a A-coil assembly, and in an
aspect the upstream evaporator discussed above was also a A-coil assembly, it should
be understood that the staged cooling system could utilize a V-coil assembly as the
downstream evaporator and in an aspect, utilize an V-coil assembly as the upstream
evaporator It should also be understood that the upstream and downstream evaporators
could each utilize a large, inclined cooling slab, or a flat cooling slab.
[0036] In accordance with another aspect of the present disclosure, a cooling system, which
may include a CRAC, includes a DX cooling circuit with a pumped refrigerant economizer
enabling the system to be run in a pumped refrigerant economizer mode when the temperature
outside is cold enough to cool the cooling fluid circulating in the cooling circuit
and bypass the compressor. The cooling fluid may illustratively be a phase change
refrigerant having a vapor phase and a liquid phase. The pumped refrigerant economizer
may illustrativley include a pump that circulates the cooling fluid, illustrataively
the refrigerant in its liquid phase, with the compressor byassed. This cooling system
then uses the pump instead of the compressor to pump the refrigerant in its liquid
phase and circulate the refrigerant when the outside air temperature is low enough
to provide the heat exchange without compressing the refrigerant in its vapor phase
to a higher pressure/condensing temperature. The economizer mode significantly increases
the cooling system's sensible coefficient of performance (COP) when the cooling system
switches to the economizer mode as described below. In terms of annual efficiency,
the climate determines the benefit. For instance, modeling has shown that the annual
energy efficiency increase in Washington DC is about 26%, while in Minneapolis, MN,
the annual energy efficiency increase is about 53%.
[0037] As discussed above, a conventional DX air conditioning system contains an evaporator,
a compressor, a condenser and an expansion device. Often the air being cooled is at
a lower temperature than the outside air. Because of this, a compressor is required
to raise the pressure of the refrigerant in its vapor phase, and therefore its condensing
temperature, to a higher temperature than the outside air so that the heat can be
rejected. In any application in which heat is rejected to the outdoors even in the
middle of the winter, the need to compress the cooling fluid consumes energy unnecessarily.
[0038] When the outdoor temperature becomes low enough to provide the overall required temperature
difference between the inside air from which the heat is removed and the outside air
to which the heat is rejected, there is no need to compress the refrigerant in its
vapor phase to a higher pressure/temperature. When that is the case, the cooling system
in accordance with this aspect of the present disclosure switches from DX (compressor)
mode to pumped refrigerant economizer mode. In the pumped refrigerant economizer mode,
the refrigerant is pumped in its liquid phase by a liquid pump to circulate the refrigerant
in the cooling circuit without compressing the refrigerant in its vapor phase. The
advantage is that the pump consumes roughly 1/10 of the power consumed by the compressor.
[0039] The temperature at which the controller of the cooling system having a pumped refrigerant
economizer mode decides to switch from one mode to the other is based on the difference
between the indoor and outdoor temperatures, and the heat load on the cooling system.
In an aspect, the cooling system described herein includes the components listed above,
which are the typical components of a DX cooling circuit described with reference
to Fig. 2, as well as a pump. When the controller decides to switch from DX (compressor)
mode to pumped refrigerant economizer mode, the compressor is turned off and the pump
is turned on. In the pumped refrigerant economizer mode, the refrigerant is bypassed
around the compressor, while in DX (compressor) mode, the refrigerant is bypassed
around the pump.
[0040] The following description of embodiments of a cooling system having a DX cooling
circuit and a pumped refrigerant economizer will show alternative system layouts and
component functionality. The three main control considerations for this system operating
in the pumped refrigerant economizer mode are capacity control, evaporator freeze
prevention (outdoor temperature can get very low) and pump protection. Most pumps
require a minimum differential to ensure adequate cooling of the motor (if the pump
is a canned motor pump) and lubrication of the bearings. Each of these control functions
can be accomplished by a few different methods using different components.
[0041] With reference to Fig. 5, an embodiment of a cooling system 500 having a pumped refrigerant
economizer mode in accordance with an aspect of the present disclosure is shown. Cooling
system 500 includes a DX cooling circuit 502 having an evaporator 504, expansion valve
506 (which may preferably be an electronic expansion valve but may also be a thermostatic
expansion valve), condenser 508 and compressor 510 arranged in a DX refrigeration
circuit. Cooling circuit 502 also includes a fluid pump 512, solenoid valve 514 and
check valves 516, 518, 522. An outlet 562 of condenser 508 is coupled to an inlet
528 of pump 512 and to an inlet 530 of check valve 516. An outlet 532 of pump 512
is coupled to an inlet 534 of solenoid valve 514. An outlet 536 of solenoid valve
514 is coupled to an inlet 538 of electronic expansion valve 506. An outlet 540 of
check valve 516 is also coupled to the inlet 538 of electronic expansion valve 506.
An outlet 542 of electronic expansion valve 506 is coupled to a refrigerant inlet
544 of evaporator 504. A refrigerant outlet 546 of evaporator 504 is coupled to an
inlet 548 of compressor 510 and to an inlet 550 of check valve 518. An outlet 552
of compressor 510 is coupled to an inlet 554 of check valve 522 and an outlet 556
of check valve 522 is coupled to an inlet 558 of condenser 508 as is an outlet 560
of check valve 518. The foregoing description corresponds to the description of Fig.
12 of USSN
13/446,310 for "Vapor Compression Cooling System with Improved Energy Efficiency Through Economization"
filed April 13, 2012. The entire of disclosure of USSN
13/446,310 is incorporated herein by reference.
[0042] Cooling system 500 also includes a controller 520 coupled to controlled components
of cooling system 500, such as electronic expansion valve 506, compressor 510, pump
512, solenoid valve 514, condenser fan 524, and evaporator air moving unit 526. Controller
520 is illustratively programmed with appropriate software that implements the below
described control of cooling system 500. Controller 520 may include, or be coupled
to, a user interface 521. Controller 520 may illustratively be an iCOM® control system
available from Liebert Corporation of Columbus, Ohio programmed with software implementing
the additional functions described below.
[0043] Pump 512 may illustratively be a variable speed pump but alternatively may be a fixed
speed pump. Condenser fan 524 may illustratively be a variable speed fan but alternatively
may be a fixed speed fan.
[0044] Where pump 512 is a variable speed pump, cooling capacity of cooling circuit 502
when in the pumped refrigerant economizer mode is controlled by controller 520 by
modulating the speed of pump 512. That is, to increase cooling capacity, controller
520 increases the speed of pump 512 to increase the rate of flow of refrigerant in
cooling circuit 502 and to decrease cooling capacity, controller 520 decreases the
speed of pump 512 to decrease the rate of flow or refrigerant in cooling circuit 502.
The refrigerant temperature at the inlet of evaporator 504 is maintained above freezing
by controller 520 modulating the speed of fan 524 of condenser 508 and the minimum
pump differential is maintained by controller 520 modulating the electronic expansion
valve 506. Pump differential means the pressure differential across the pump. In this
regard, when pump 512 is a variable speed pump, it may illustratively be a hermetically
sealed pump cooled by the refrigerant that is flowing through it as it is pumping
the refrigerant and thus a minimum pump differential is needed so that pump 512 is
adequately cooled.
[0045] Where pump 512 is a fixed speed pump, cooling capacity of cooling circuit 502 is
controlled by controller 520 modulating electronic expansion valve 506 to increase
or decrease the rate of flow of refrigerant in cooling circuit 502.
[0046] In DX (compressor) mode, controller 520 controls compressor 510 to be running, solenoid
valve 514 to be closed and pump 512 to be off. Since compressor 510 is running, suction
at an inlet 548 of compressor 510 draws vaporized refrigerant from an outlet 546 of
evaporator 504 into compressor 510 where it is compressed by compressor 510, raising
its pressure. The suction at the inlet 548 of running compressor 510 will draw the
refrigerant into the inlet 548 and it doesn't flow through check valve 518. The refrigerant
then flows through check valve 522 into condenser 508 where it is cooled and condensed
to a liquid state. Since solenoid valve 514 is closed and pump 512 is off, after the
refrigerant flows out of condenser 508 it flows through check valve 516, through expansion
valve 506 where its pressure is reduced and then into evaporator 504. The refrigerant
flows through evaporator 504, where it is heated to vaporization by air to be cooled
flowing through evaporator 504, and then back to the inlet 548 of compressor 510.
[0047] When controller 520 switches cooling circuit 502 to the pumped refrigerant economizer
mode, it opens solenoid valve 514, turns compressor 510 off and pump 512 on. Pump
512 then pumps the refrigerant to circulate it and it flows through solenoid valve
514, electronic expansion valve 506, evaporator 504, check valve 518 bypassing compressor
510, through condenser 508 and back to an inlet 528 of pump 512. Controller 520 switches
cooling circuit 502 to the pumped refrigerant economizer mode when the temperature
of the outside air is cold enough to provide the requisite temperature differential
between the inside air to be cooled and the outside air to which heat is rejected.
[0048] In an aspect, an inverted trap 564 may be coupled between outlet 536 of valve 514
and inlet 538 of electronic expansion valve 506 as shown in phantom in Fig. 5.
[0049] In an aspect, a receiver/surge tank, such as receiver/surge tank 622 described below,
may be coupled between outlet 562 of condenser 508 an inlet 528 of pump [[55]] 512
so that all refrigerant flow through the receiver/surge tank prior to entering inlet
528.
[0050] Fig. 6 shows a cooling system 600 having a cooling circuit 602 that is a variation
of cooling circuit 502. With the following differences, cooling system 600 is otherwise
essentially the same as cooling system 500 and otherwise operates in the same manner
as cooling system 500. In cooling system 600, a solenoid valve 604 is added at the
inlet 548 of compressor 510 that is controlled by controller 520 to prevent liquid
slugging to the compressor. When cooling system 600 is in the DX (compressor) mode,
controller 520 opens solenoid valve 604. When cooling system 600 is in the pumped
refrigerant economizer mode, controller 520 closes solenoid valve 604 thus preventing
refrigerant from flowing to inlet 548 of compressor 510 and preventing liquid slugging
of compressor 510. A bypass solenoid valve 606 is also added around electronic expansion
valve 506 and a distributor (not shown) that distributes the refrigerant to the circuits
of the evaporator includes an inlet port that bypasses the orifice of the distributor,
and the outlet of the bypass solenoid valve 606 is plumbed to this bypass inlet to
reduce system pressure drop. In cooling system 600, the pump differential is maintained
by controller 520 modulating a discharge control valve 608 at discharge outlet 532
of pump 512. It should be understood that while discharge control valve 608 is shown
with the same valve symbol as used for solenoid valves, discharge control valve 608
is a variable flow valve as opposed to an on-off valve. In this embodiment, pump 512
is variable speed pump and controller 520 modulates the speed of pump 512 to control
a flow rate of the refrigerant being circulated to control the cooling capacity of
cooling system 500 when cooling system 500 is in the pumped refrigerant economizer
mode. Cooling circuit 602 of cooling system 600 also includes bypass line 610 around
the condenser 508 with bypass control valve 612 in bypass line 610 to allow flow of
the warm refrigerant around the condenser 508 to mix with cold refrigerant flowing
from outlet 562 of condenser 508 to maintain the desired temperature and prevent evaporator
freezing. Bypass control valve 612 is a variable flow valve and is illustratively
controlled by controller 520. A pressure regulating valve 616 and a check valve 618
are coupled in series between outlet 562 of condenser 508 and to an inlet 620 of receiver/surge
tank 622. An outlet 614 of bypass control valve 612 is also coupled to inlet 528 of
pump 512 and to inlet 620 of receiver/surge tank 622, and thus also coupled to an
outlet 624 of check valve 618. An outlet 626 of receiver/surge tank 622 is coupled
to inlet 528 of pump 512. In the previously discussed embodiment of Fig. 5, no receiver/surge
tank 622 is required because the cooling system is run in pumped refrigerant economizer
mode by controller 520 with the same distribution of refrigerant as in DX (compressor)
mode (liquid between the condenser and the evaporator inlet, liquid-vapor mix in the
evaporator, and vapor between the evaporator outlet and the condenser inlet). With
receiver/surge tank 622, controller 520 can run cooling system 600 to overfeed evaporator
504 so that there would be a liquid-vapor mix between evaporator outlet 546 and condenser
508. This increases the cooling capacity of cooling system 600 compared to the previously
discussed embodiments, but the addition of receiver/surge tank 622 adds cost. It should
be understood that receiver/surge tank 622 can be used with the previously discussed
embodiments and doing so makes the system less charge sensitive. That is, the system
can accommodate wider variations in refrigerant charge levels.
[0051] Fig. 7A shows a cooling system 700 that is a variation of cooling system 600 having
a cooling circuit 702. With the following differences, cooling system 700 is otherwise
essentially the same as cooling system 600 and otherwise operates in the same manner
as cooling system 600. Outlet 614 of bypass control valve 612 is coupled through check
valve 704 to inlet 620 of receiver/surge tank 622 and to inlet 528 of pump 512 and
outlet 624 of check valve 618 is also coupled to inlet 620 of receiver/surge tank
622 and to inlet 528 of pump 512. The refrigerant preferentially flows through receiver/surge
tank 622 prior to entering inlet 528 of pump 512, but may flow around receiver surge
tank 622.
[0052] Fig. [[7BA]] 7B shows a cooling system 700' that is also a variation of cooling system
600 having cooling circuit 702'. Bypass control valve 612 and check valve 704 are
eliminated and the outlet of check valve 618 is coupled to the inlet 620 of receiver/surge
tank 622 but not to the inlet 528 of pump 512. In cooling system 700', all the refrigerant
flows through receiver/surge tank 622 prior to entering inlet 528 of pump 512.
[0053] The discussions of the cooling circuits of Figs. 5, 6, 7A and 7B were based on a
one circuit cooling system, or on a two circuit system in which the evaporators are
parallel in the air-stream. The cooling circuits of Figs. 5, 6, 7A and 7B can also
be utilized for staged cooling as described above, particularly with reference to
Fig. 3, where the evaporators of the two circuits are staged in series in the air
stream of air to be cooled. Because of this, the entering air temperature is higher
on the upstream circuit than on the downstream circuit. Subsequently, the evaporating
temperature is higher on the upstream circuit as well. So with the staged system,
the upstream circuit will be able to switch over to pumped refrigerant economizer
mode before the downstream cooling circuit, which could still be operating in DX (compressor)
mode depending on the load. For example, two cooling circuits 502 could be arranged
with their evaporators in series to provide staged cooling. Fig. 8 shows a cooling
system 800 having two cooling circuits 502 arranged to provide staged cooling along
the lines discussed above with regard to Fig. 3. In this embodiment, compressor 510
in each of the two cooling circuits 502 may illustratively be a tandem digital scroll
compressor.
[0054] In a staged cooling system having two or more staged cooling circuits, at least the
most upstream cooling circuit is a variable capacity cooling circuit and preferably
the downstream cooling circuit (or circuits) is also variable capacity cooling circuits.
Such variable capacity may be provided by the use of a tandem digital scroll compressor
as discussed above. It can also be provided by the use of a single variable capacity
compressor, such as a digital scroll compressor, a plurality of fixed capacity compressors,
or other combinations of fixed and variable capacity compressors. Variable capacity
is also provided by the liquid pump when the cooling circuit is a pumped refrigerant
cooling circuit, or operating in the pumped refrigerant economizer mode such as cooling
circuit 502 operating in the pumped refrigerant economizer mode.
[0055] The advantage to using a cooling system with staged cooling as discussed above with
this pumped refrigerant economizer is that hours of operation can be gained in pumped
refrigerant economizer mode on the upstream cooling circuit since it is operating
at a higher evaporating temperature than either cooling circuit would be in a typical
prior art parallel evaporator system. So, energy can be saved for more hours of the
year. The colder the climate is, the more annual energy efficiency increase can be
realized.
[0056] As has been discussed, in a typical vapor compression refrigeration system, a large
percentage of system power is used to compress the refrigerant vapor leaving the evaporator,
thereby increasing the condensing temperature of the refrigerant to allow for heat
rejection in the condenser. As described above, particularly with reference to Fig.
5, in an aspect of the present disclosure in order to save energy in a vapor compression
refrigeration system, a pump can be used to move refrigerant from the condenser to
the evaporator when outdoor temperatures are low enough to provide "free" cooling
without the need to compress the refrigerant vapor. Such a pumped refrigerant (economizer)
system is a precision cooling system with aims of energy savings, high efficiency
and optimized system performance. System control is important to achieving these objectives.
More specifically, the control objectives are divided into three levels with different
priorities, namely:
- 1. Component Safety Level: to guarantee key component safety
- i) Pump cavitation prevention - Subcooling monitoring
- ii) Ensuring pump cooling and lubrication
- iii) Evaporator coil freeze protection
- 2. Performance Level: to run the system functionally and flawlessly
- i) Maintain controlled air temperature to the setpoint
- ii) Proper and smooth working mode switchover
- iii) Fault detection and alarm handling
- 3. Optimization Level
- i) Extending economizer running hours
- ii) Advanced fault detection and diagnosis
[0057] The resources available for the system to achieve the above-listed objectives are
the installed actuators, which include a variable-speed pump (e.g., pump 512 in Fig.
5), a variable-speed condenser fan (e.g., fan 524 in Fig. 5) and an electronic expansion
valve (EEV) (e.g., EEV 506 in Fig. 5). The first step of the control design is to
work out a control strategy to decide how to allocate the resources to different control
tasks. In other words, given that the entire economizer system is a multi-input multi-output
system (with multiple actuators and multiple variables to be controlled), how to decouple
the system and determine the input-output relationship is the solution that the following
control strategy implements. This control strategy is summarized on a high level basis
as follows:
- Manipulate the condenser fan to control the refrigerant temperature leaving the condenser;
- Manipulate the pump to control system capacity, and ultimately the air temperature
in the controlled space;
- Manipulate the EEV to control pressure differential across the pump.
[0058] The multi-input and multi-output pumped refrigerant economizer system is controlled
in a relatively simple way. The system is decoupled into three feedback control loops
which regulate their controlled variables by manipulating their corresponding control
inputs as follows:
[0059] The aforementioned control strategy benefits the system in several ways:
- 1. The condenser fan controls the refrigerant temperature to a setpoint such that"
- a. Refrigerant temperature will not be low enough to freeze the evaporator coil;
- b. Subcooling is maximized to prevent pump cavitation;
- c. Condenser fan speed is optimized to save energy in the sense that the fan speed
can't be further reduced without compromising subcooling and cooling capacity.
- 2. The pump speed controls refrigerant flow rate, and the capacity in turn, by controlling
the room's air temperature to the user given setpoint.
- a. Pump speed is roughly linear with respect to capacity for a fixed refrigerant temperature,
which is maintained by the condenser fan speed control.
- b. Linearity facilitates high control precision of the air temperature in the controlled
space.
- 3. The EEV controls the differential pressure across the pump such that
- a. The pump motor is sufficiently cooled;
- b. The pump bearings are sufficiently lubricated.
[0060] The entire system energy consumption is optimized by the foregoing control strategy
in the sense that no further energy consumption can be realized without sacrificing
cooling performance.
[0061] Fig. 9 is a schematic of a cooling system 900 having one cooling circuit 502 having
a DX cooling circuit 904 and a pumped refrigerant economizer circuit 906. Cooling
system 900 may physically consist of three units: an indoor unit 908 (illustratively
a computer room air conditioner), a pumped refrigerant economizer unit 916, and an
air-cooled condenser unit 912. The indoor unit 908 is located inside the room to be
cooled, such as a data center room, and contains the major components of the DX cooling
circuit (other than the condenser 508), including the evaporator 504, compressor 510,
and expansion valve 506, etc. The indoor unit's 908 functionality is to operate the
system in a standard direct expansion mode, and also drive the valves needed to run
the system in pumped refrigerant economizer mode. The pumped refrigerant economizer
unit 916 is located outside the room and contains the major components including pump
512, etc. The pumped refrigerant economizer unit 916 uses liquid pump 512 to move
refrigerant from the condenser 508 to the evaporator 504 when the outdoor temperatures
are low enough to provide "free" cooling without running a direct expansion refrigeration
system. The condenser unit 912 is also located outside the room to be cooled but separated
from the pumped refrigerant economizer unit 916. It cooperates with one of the other
two units 908, 916 according to heat rejection demand. In Fig. 9, "T" in a circle
is a temperature sensor and "P" in a circle is a pressure sensor, in each instance
that are coupled to controller 520, such as to a respective one of controller boards
918, 920, 922 (which are discussed below). The temperature sensors include an outside
ambient air temperature sensor (shown adjacent condenser 508) and a supply air (or
room return air) temperature sensor (shown adjacent evaporator 504). The remaining
temperature sensors sense temperatures of the refrigerant at the indicated locations
of cooling circuit 502 and the pressure sensors sense the pressures of the refrigerant
at the indicated locations of cooling circuit 502.
[0062] When the cooling system 900 operates in pumped refrigerant economizer mode, there
are three feedback control loops for the basic control of the pumped refrigerant economizer
mode, as shown in Fig. 10.
A refrigerant temperature feedback control loop 1000 controls the refrigerant temperature
to a setpoint by regulating the condenser fan speed. The refrigerant temperature is
measured at the pump outlet or at the condenser outlet. In an aspect, the setpoint
is set in the range of 37°F to 42°F. It should be understood that these values are
exemplar and the fixed setpoint can be other than 37°F to 42°F. It should also be
understood that the setpoint can be inputted manually, such as by a user, or determined
by a controller such as controller 520.
A room air temperature feedback control loop 1002 controls the room's air temperature
to the setpoint entered by a user, such as into controller 520, by regulating the
pump speed.
An liquid pump differential pressure feedback control loop 1004 maintains the liquid
pump differential pressure (PSID) within a given range by regulating the EEV 506 opening.
In an aspect, the given range is set to be 20 PSID to 25 PSID. The given range is
determined by its upper and lower setpoints. It should be understood that these values
are exemplar and the given range can be other than 20 PSID to 25 PSID. It should also
be understood that that the given range could be input by a user.
[0063] Each control loop 1000, 1002, 1004 may illustratively be a process control type of
control loop, and may preferably be a PID loop. In the embodiment shown in Fig. 10,
each control loop 1000, 1002, 1004 is shown implemented with a separate controller
1006, 1008, 1010, respectively, such as to co-locate a respective controller board(s)
918, 920, 922 (Fig. 9) having each controller 1006, 1008, 1010 in proximity to the
device it is controlling, and controllers 1006, 1008, 1010 communicate with each other,
such as via a controller area network (CAN) bus. For example, the controller board(s)
918 having controller 1006 is located in proximity to condenser 508 in that controller
1006 controls the speed of condenser fan 524. The controller board 920 having controller
1008 is located in proximity to pump 512 in that controller 1008 controls the speed
of pump 512. The controller board(s) 922 having controller 1010 is collocated in proximity
to EEV 506 in that controller 1010 controls the position of EEV 506. While controllers
1006, 1008, 1010 are implemented on separately located controller boards in this embodiment,
controllers 1006, 1008 and 1010 are collectively considered part of controller 520.
It should be understood that control loops 1000, 1002 and 1004 could be implemented
on a controller board(s) at a single location along with the remainder of the control
functions of controller 520.
[0064] Refrigerant temperature feedback control loop 1000 has an output at which a condenser
fan speed control signal is output and has as inputs the refrigerant temperature setpoint
and a feedback signal which is the actual refrigerant temperature, such as by way
of example and not of limitation, at the outlet of the condenser. The room air temperature
feedback control loop 1002 has an output at which a liquid pump speed control signal
is output and has as inputs the room air temperature setpoint and a feedback signal
which is the actual room air temperature, such as by way of example and not of limitation,
at the return air inlet of the cooling system. The liquid pump pressure differential
control feedback loop 1004 has an output at which an electronic expansion valve position
signal is output and having as inputs the given range and a feedback signal which
is a pressure differential across the liquid pump.
[0065] In order to further improve the transient performance of the refrigerant temperature
control (which is controlled by controlling the speed of condenser fan 524 by control
loop 1000), a feedforward controller (controller 1006-1 in Fig. 10) is applied to
stabilize refrigerant temperature by using the pump speed control signal 1012 from
controller 1008 and the EEV control signal 1018 from controller 1010 as its inputs.
The rationale is that refrigerant temperature is related to the flow rate that can
be estimated by the pump speed and EEV opening. The outputs 1012, 1018 of controllers
1008 and 1010 of Fig. 10 are fed forward to the condenser fan speed control loop 1000.
The condenser fan speed signal consists of two parts: feedback signal and feedforward
signal. Thus, the condenser fan can respond by being driven by the feedforward signal
in advance of the feedback signal coming back.
[0066] The three control loops have different magnitudes of response time, which prevents
the situation in which multiple control elements can interact to create instability
in the control.
[0067] This control strategy applies to the pumped refrigerant economizer system particularly
and can also be applied to the class of cooling or air conditioning systems with pumped
refrigerant circulation.
[0068] The foregoing description of cooling system 900 is based on a cooling system having
one cooling circuit. A similar control strategy can be applied to cooling systems
having two cooling circuits, such as those arranged to provide staged cooling as discussed
above. For a cooling system having two cooling circuits, such as having staged cooling
with two cooling circuits, the condenser fan and EEV in the second circuit perform
the same respective control tasks as in the first circuit. The cooling capacity is
controlled by the aggregate pump speeds. A control algorithm, an example of which
is discussed below, determines the capacity contributed by each pump, and hence decides
each pump's speed.
[0069] As discussed, when the cooling system is in the pumped refrigerant economizer mode,
there are three main controlled parameters: room temperature, refrigerant temperature
and pump pressure differential (outlet pressure minus inlet pressure). The room temperature
is controlled by modulating the pump speed via a variable frequency drive. In a cooling
system having staged cooling with two or more cooling circuits, when the cooling system
is in the pumped refrigerant economizer mode, the cooling load requirement will determine
if the pump in one or more than one of the cooling circuits needs to be operated.
[0070] In an illustrative embodiment, controller 520 switches the cooling system, such as
cooling system 800, to the pumped refrigerant economizer mode when there is either
a minimum difference between the room return air temperature entering the cooling
system and the outdoor air temperature or the outdoor air temperature is below a minimum
(such as below 35°F in the example below). In an aspect, the lower of the actual room
return air temperature and the setpoint is used for the comparison. In an aspect,
the minimum temperature difference between the room return air is 45°F and the minimum
outside air temperature is 35°F. It should be understood that these temperatures are
examples and minimum temperature difference other than 45°F and a minimum outside
air temperature other than 35°F can be used. As discussed above, in an aspect, the
cooling circuits in a system having staged cooling may be controlled separately in
which case the room air temperature used for the comparison for each cooling circuit
may be the actual room return air temperature (or its setpoint if lower) entering
the evaporator 504 of that cooling circuit 502.
[0071] In an aspect, controller 520 will switch the cooling system from pumped refrigerant
economizer mode to direct expansion mode when the pumped refrigerant economizer mode
is not keeping up with the cooling demand. In the event that the cooling system has
staged cooling, in an aspect controller 520 will first switch the most downstream
cooling circuit from the pumped refrigerant economizer mode to direct expansion mode
and if this fails to provide sufficient cooling, then successively switches each next
upstream cooling circuit in turn to the direct expansion mode.
[0072] In an aspect, controller 520 also switches each cooling circuit from the pumped refrigerant
economizer mode to the direct expansion mode should the pump differential pressure
of the pump 512 of that cooling circuit fall below a predetermined minimum for a predetermined
period of time. This prevents pump failure due to insufficient pump differential pressure.
[0073] In an aspect, controller 520 also switches each cooling circuit from the pumped refrigerant
economizer rode to the direct expansion mode if the temperature of the refrigerant
leaving the pump of that cooling circuit falls below a predetermined temperature for
a predetermined period of time.
[0074] In an aspect, controller 520 may also switch each cooling circuit from the pumped
refrigerant economizer mode to the direct expansion mode in the event of a condition
indicating a failure of the pumped refrigerant economizer mode, such as loss of power
to the pump.
[0075] In an aspect, the controller includes a real-time load estimator 926 (shown in phantom
in Fig. 9) that estimates real-time indoor heat load on the cooling system and uses
the estimated real-time indoor heat load to determine whether to operate the cooling
system in the pumped refrigerant economizer mode or in the direct expansion mode.
In an aspect, the load estimator calculates the real-time indoor heat load based on
the indoor return air temperature (for example, the temperature of the room air at
the return air inlet of the CRAC], the supply air temperature (for example, the temperature
of the cooled air exiting the CRAC) and the volume of air flow across the evaporator.
It may for example do so using the following equation (implemented in software) in
the controller:

where
ṁ is the mass flow rate of the air flowing across the evaporator, and
cp is the molar heat capacity at a constant pressure of the air flowing across the evaporator.
[0076] In an aspect, if supply air temperature or return air temperature is not available,
the load estimator uses compressor loading information instead. In an aspect, compressor
loading is determined by

where CFC is the call for cooling and M
CAP is the maximum capacity coefficient of the compressor determined from a 2D lookup
table, whose inputs are the indoor control temperature and the outdoor temperature.
CFC is the actual cooling that the cooling system is being called on to provide, typically
expressed as a percentage of the overall or nominal maximum cooling capacity of the
cooling system.
[0077] The capacity of the cooling system, such as any of cooling systems 500, 600, 700,
700', is a function of the difference between the indoor return air temperature (referred
to as "indoor temperature") and outdoor temperature. Controller 520 obtains the current
real-time load information of the cooling system from its real time load estimator
926. Given the condition of the indoor temperature, outdoor temperature and real-time
load information, controller 520 determines whether it is feasible to run the cooling
system in the pumped refrigerant economizer mode. For example, if the cooling system
is able to reach a full capacity of 125kW at a 40 degF difference between indoor and
outdoor temperature, the current indoor temperature is controlled to a set point of
80 degF and the load is 50% (62.5kW), controller 520 determines that the cooling system
can be operated in the pumped refrigerant economizer mode when the outdoor temperature
is 60 degF or below. A simplistic control equation for the foregoing is:

[0078] Where Outdoor Temp. is the outdoor temperature at or below which the cooling system
can be run in the pumped refrigerant economizer mode, Indoor Temp. Setpoint is the
setpoint for the indoor temperature, %Load is the real-time indoor load on the cooling
system (that may be estimated as discussed above) as a percent of the maximum load
of the cooling system, and Max. Temp. Diff is the temperature difference between indoor
temperature and outdoor temperature at which the pumped refrigerant economizer can
be operated to provide full capacity.
[0079] Fig. 11 is a basic flow chart for a software routine for control of the cooling system
utilizing the real time load estimator 926, and may illustratively be part of the
software of controller 520. At 1100, controller 520 estimates real time indoor load
as described above. At 1102, controller 520 determines the Outdoor Temp. control parameter
based on the above control equation. At 1104, controller 520 checks whether the actual
outdoor temperature is below the Outdoor Temp. control parameter. If so, at 1106 controller
520 operates the cooling system in the pumped refrigerant economizer mode. If not,
at 1108 controller 520 operates the cooling system in the DX mode.
[0080] It should be understood that in cooling systems having a plurality of cooling circuits
each with a pumped refrigerant economizer mode and a DX mode, the controller makes
the above determination for each cooling circuit as to the outdoor air temperature
at or below that cooling circuit can be operated in the pumped refrigerant economizer
mode.
[0081] Spatially relative terms, such as "inner," "outer," "beneath", "below", "lower",
"above", "upper" and the like, may be used herein for ease of description to describe
one element or feature's relationship to another element(s) or feature(s) as illustrated
in the figures. Spatially relative terms may be intended to encompass different orientations
of the device in use or operation in addition to the orientation depicted in the figures.
For example, if the device in the figures is turned over, elements described as "below"
or "beneath" other elements or features would then be oriented "above" the other elements
or features. Thus, the example term "below" can encompass both an orientation of above
and below. The device may be otherwise oriented (rotated 90 degrees or at other orientations)
and the spatially relative descriptors used herein interpreted accordingly.
[0082] As used herein, the term controller, control module, control system, or the like
may refer to, be part of, or include an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC);
an electronic circuit; a combinational logic circuit; a field programmable gate array
(FPGA); a processor (shared, dedicated, or group) that executes code; a programmable
logic controller, programmable control system such as a processor based control system
including a computer based control system, a process controller such as a PID controller,
or other suitable hardware components that provide the described functionality or
provide the above functionality when programmed with software as described herein;
or a combination of some or all of the above, such as in a system-on-chip. The term
module may include memory (shared, dedicated, or group) that stores code executed
by the processor.
[0083] The term software, as used above, may refer to computer programs, routines, functions,
classes, and/or objects and may include firmware, and/or microcode.
[0084] The apparatuses and methods described herein may be implemented by software in one
or more computer programs executed by one or more processors of one or more controllers.
The computer programs include processor-executable instructions that are stored on
a non-transitory tangible computer readable medium. The computer programs may also
include stored data. Non-limiting examples of the non-transitory tangible computer
readable medium are nonvolatile memory, magnetic storage, and optical storage.
[0085] The foregoing description of the embodiments has been provided for purposes of illustration
and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention.